Original Article

Hospitalists and Improved Cost Savings in Patients With Bacterial Pneumonia at a State Level

Authors: Danielle B. Scheurer, MD, Justin G. Miller, MD, Dwight I. Blair, MD, Pam J. Pride, MD, Gena M. Walker, MD, Patrick J. Cawley, MD

Abstract

Objectives: In the hospitalist literature, most studies have focused on outcomes related to cost savings for individual hospital systems. This study sought to determine if hospitalists could improve cost savings at a state level.


Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of a statewide database for inpatients in 2002 with bacterial pneumonia. The primary outcomes measured were mean length of stay (LOS) and mean charges per patient between hospitalists and nonhospitalists. The secondary outcome measured was percentage of patients by severity of illness between the groups.


Results: The difference of LOS in the moderate illness category was 4.9 days for hospitalists and 5.2 for nonhospitalists (P = 0.04). The major illness category was 7.4 and 8 (P = 0.03), and the extreme illness category was 10.6 and 12.9 (P = 0.02). The difference of mean charges per patient in the major category were $20,950 and $23,259 (P = 0.03) and $42,045 and $56,867, respectively (P = 0.002), in the extreme category. Patients in the major/extreme categories of illness accounted for 41% of hospitalist patients versus 32% of nonhospitalist patients (P < 0.001).


Conclusions: Hospitalists have shorter LOS, lower charges per patient, and admit a larger proportion of high acuity patients at a state level.


Key Points


* The number of hospitalists in the country is growing exponentially.


* Hospitalists improve cost outcomes in patients with community-acquired pneumonia at a state level.


* Hospitalists care for a larger proportion of more severely ill patients than nonhospitalist physicians.

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